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Politics

Japan slams 'deplorable' Russian undersea cables

June 11, 2018

A territorial spat over the Kuril Islands has been a stumbling block to reconciliation since the end of World War II. Russia now wants to lay an undersea fiber optic cable to the disputed islands.

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Beach on the Kuril Islands
Image: gemeinfrei

Tokyo on Monday protested plans by Moscow to bury an undersea cable between the Russian Far East and the Russian-controlled Kuril Islands, which Japan also claims as its Northern Territories.

"It's extremely regrettable as such a project is proceeding under the Russian occupation that has no legal basis," Japanese government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said.

Read more: Will Japan and Russia finally resolve their territorial dispute?

Russia told Japan it would start working on the undersea project on Sunday, according to Kyodo News, a Japanese news agency.

Tokyo also complained to China over the involvement of Chinese multinational Huawei Technologies in the project, he added.

Infographic showing Kuril Islands

Century-old territorial dispute

Russia lost the islands after it was defeated by Japan in the Russo-Japanese War from 1904-05. Soviet troops recaptured them towards the end of World War II, forcing some 17,000 Japanese residents to flee to the nearby Japanese island of Hokkaido.

Moscow's steadfast refusal to return the Kuril Islands to Japanese control has stopped both countries from signing a post-war peace treaty.

Maintaining control of the islands ensures Russia's Vladivostok-based fleet has year-round access to the Pacific Ocean through a strait that does not freeze over in winter.

In 2016, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Russian President Vladimir Putin agreed to discuss joint economic projects on the disputed islands. But the deal has so far led nowhere.

There are presently around 17,000 Russian citizens living on the island
Around 17,000 Russian citizens live on the islandsImage: picture-alliance/dpa

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kw/amp (AFP, dpa)